it doesn't.Squirrley wrote:How the heck does a compass help you with figuring out the prevailing wind? The only way I've found is to sit down for a couple minutes and observe the wind direction, and which way the clouds are moving.
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it doesn't.Squirrley wrote:How the heck does a compass help you with figuring out the prevailing wind? The only way I've found is to sit down for a couple minutes and observe the wind direction, and which way the clouds are moving.








Eric, what I want to know is how is your wife such a tiny thing eating all that canned chili and Easy Cheese?EricinMaryland wrote:
very clever. I've never heard about that before. good tip.EricinMaryland wrote:These tubes, after you break the seal, are not water proof, but I wrapped their threads with teflon tape and after submerging for 2 hrs in sink, they were dry. I'd call them water resistant.
plus you can go all Friar Tuck on zombie ass.EricinMaryland wrote:- Walking stick didn't do anything for me, but kids enjoyed it, and as I was typing this wife added, "I enjoyed the walking stick too."









EricinMaryland wrote:Mero... I reviewed your BOB and sadly did not find much that would serve as double-duty from your pics. My wife also wondered how long the innocence of the thread would last.![]()
We have the same Max bags. I took the Falcon II hiking and found it was too small for me, but then you're really going compact and lightweight. I recently picked up the Vulture II and it's working really well. If you're in Alaska, I'm surprised you don't have more fire-based items, clothing, and you're lucky that you don't have to pack meds for chronic medical conditions. Did you braid the paracord yourself or was that a pre-bought product?

EricinMaryland wrote:We also got religion on the Figure 9 Nitize Carabiners...
Do any of you keep gloves in your BOBs?
Fenris wrote:God-speed on all your innovative new ideas, lolz.
-fenris-
Veritas wrote:My bad, I obviously over-reacted. You are allowed to disagree without me being a douchebag.





The heavier pack had me slipping almost every other step depending on the ground... and with the leaf cover and rain, it was easy to slip on tree roots and fallen rocks/sticks. The walking stick helped immeasurably. It was also handy for knocking spider webs out of my way that otherwise would have ended up in my face. After 1.5 miles, I had to turn around and head home to start my Saturday, but even by the then the walking stick was helping.



EricinMaryland wrote: but what's the ZS obsession with socks and underwear? It's not like you're starting the bug out scenario naked... If I'm able to access my BOB, I'm also able to access anything I might feel I need for the specific purpose of my 3 day trek.



EricinMaryland wrote:I like the color pattern. My wife and I share similar preferences in equipment so we're splitting things out where she gets solid colors and I get the camo stuff. I've got an intense hatred of all things brightly colored when it comes to apocalyptic scenarios.
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